A Structural and Functional Diversity Test - American Chemical Society

Structural and Functional Diversity Test. ZHAN-TING LI,* JUN-LI HOU, AND CHUANG LI. State Key Laboratory of Bio-Organic and Natural Products Chemistry...
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Peptide Mimics by Linear Arylamides: A Structural and Functional Diversity Test ZHAN-TING LI,* JUN-LI HOU, AND CHUANG LI State Key Laboratory of Bio-Organic and Natural Products Chemistry, Shanghai Institute of Organic Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 354 Fenglin Lu, Shanghai 200032, China RECEIVED ON OCTOBER 6, 2007

CON SPECTUS

H

ydrogen-bonded oligoamide foldamers represent a large family of peptide mimics. Pioneered by Gellman and Seebach (Appella, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1996, 118, 13071 -13072; Seebach, Helv. Chim. Acta 1996, 79, 913-941), aliphatic amino acid-based mimic structures have been extensively studied. Results of these studies have found many useful applications in areas including chemical biology and drug design. This Account describes our efforts in creating arylamide-based foldamers whose compact conformations are stabilized by hydrogen bonding. The aim of our study was to test whether this class of mimic structures is sufficiently rigid to lead to new interesting functions. It was envisioned that, if our approach was workable, it might be developed into a new family of useful soft frameworks for studies toward molecular recognition, self-assembly, and materials science. Three classes of mimic structures, that is, folded or helical, zigzag, and straight oligomers, have been constructed by simply changing the positions of the substituents at the benzene rings in the backbones. Both amide and hydrazide units have been employed to construct the frameworks. In most cases, O · · · H-N hydrogen bonding was chosen to stabilize the compact conformations. Notably, for the first time the F · · · H-N hydrogen-bonding pattern has been used to tune the size of the cavity. To test their usefulness, these frameworks have been extensively modified and functionalized. 1H NMR, UV–vis, fluorescence, circular dichroism, and X-ray diffraction techniques have all been employed to establish the compact structures and their interactions with guest molecules. The properties or functions of the mimic structures have been studied in seven aspects. (1) Acyclic molecular receptors: The amide foldamers can bind amine cations, while the hydrazide foldamers can complex saccharides. (2) Acceleration of anisole hydrolysis: Several folded oligomers are able to bind alkali metal cations and consequently promote the hydrolysis of the nitro-substituted anisole by alkali hydroxides. (3) Facilitation of macrocyclization: The straight and zigzag backbones can be readily functionalized, from which two classes of macrocycles have been prepared. (4) Homoduplex assembly: Zigzag oligomers that are appended with amide units at one side can form stable homoduplexes through the cooperative selfbinding of the amide units. (5) Assembly of molecular tweezers: Discrete binding moieties are introduced at the ends of the oligomers, which can bind structurally matched guests. (6) Assembly of nano networks: F · · · H-N hydrogen-bonded foldamers can stack with fullerenes; thus a mixture of fullerenes with a trifoldamer generates honeycomb-styled nanoarchitectures. (7) Assembly of dynamic [2]catenanes: A preorganized porphyrin tweezer has been synthesized, from which dynamic three-component [2]catenanes have been assembled in high yields. Our results demonstrate that hydrogen-bonding-driven arylamide oligomers are a class of structurally unique mimic structures. The folded oligomers themselves can be used as synthetic receptors for binding different guest molecules, while incorporation of different segments into one system can produce many desired shapes. In addition, all of the rigid frameworks can be readily functionalized at specific sites. We believe that our results have helped to open the door for some new chemistry in molecular recognition, self-assembly, and other related areas.

Published on the Web 03/25/2008 www.pubs.acs.org/acr 10.1021/ar700219m CCC: $40.75 © 2008 American Chemical Society

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Introduction

functions such as recognition, self-assembly, or catalysis, that

One primary goal in research on peptide mimics is to understand the rules that dominate the structure–property relationship of peptides and proteins. Because natural molecules are mainly composed of R-amino acids, most efforts in this field have been devoted to the creation of mimic structures with various aliphatic β-, γ-, or δ-amino acid segments. The progress achieved so far has been great, leading already to wide applications of the mimicking systems in biomolecular design and drug development. Oligomers consisting of arylamide units represent another family of mimic structures that have also aroused considerable interest in recent years. Since stable folding conformations are prerequisite to the formation of the three-dimensional structures and functions of peptides and proteins, mimic structures that have strong tendency to adopt similar compact states have received particularly great attention.1–5 Pioneered by Gellman and Seebach,6,7 studies on such oligoamides have developed into a new field of “foldamers”, as coined by Gellman.2 One promising class of foldamers are those composed of arylamide segments and stabilized by intramolecular hydrogen bonding.8–11 As a result of the directionality of the hydrogen bonding and the intrinsic rigidity and planarity of the arylamide units, mimic structures of this class usually display a relatively high conformational predictability. The first example of arylamide-based foldamers was reported by Hamilton et al. in 1996.12 Since then, Lehn, Gong, Huc, and others have developed many elaborate frameworks starting from different arylamide segments that are stabilized by discrete hydrogen-bonding patterns.13–19 As more structurally elegant frameworks are created, it becomes increasingly likely to design systems that are capable of exhibiting tailored functions. For example, several pyridine-derived foldamers have been utilized to mimic the binding surfaces of protein helices.19 Our efforts in this field have been concentrated on the investigation of the structure–property relationship by designing new arylamide-based frameworks. We logically viewed this strategy as a new approach to mimicking the secondary structures and, more importantly, functions of natural peptides. The strategy has been proven successful and allowed us to create a variety of molecular receptors, synthetic methodologies, self-assembling patterns, and nanoscaled architectures. These results are summarized in this Account.

are common for peptides and proteins. Studies on the recog-

Design Consideration

lecular five- and six-membered hydrogen-bonding motifs are

In 2002, we became motivated to search for new forms of artificial secondary structures. In particular, we hoped to construct frameworks that are capable of exhibiting interesting

well-established.8,9 Further modifications of both backbones

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nition behavior of linear molecules may be traced back to as early as the 1970s, when Vögtle and Weber investigated the complexing properties of oligo(ethylene glycol) derivatives toward metal ions.20 In 2000, Lehn et al. reported a new linear oligo-isophthalamide strand that folded to bind a cyanuric acid derivative.21 However, from the standpoint of molecular recognition, flexible receptors may not be the most ideal because their conformations become confined upon binding, producing important negative entropy. Also in 2000, Moore et al. showed that hydrophobically driven oligo(m-phenylene ethynylene) foldamers could bind guests of complementary size and shape.22 The depth of the cavity produced by this family of foldamers can be regulated by changing the length of the backbones,23 but the width of the cavity seems quite difficult to modify. We have devoted our efforts to hydrogen-bonded arylamide oligomers, which are relatively easy to synthesize and modify. Another consideration was that by simply changing the positions of functional groups in the segments, we could create oligomers of other extended conformations, as shown in an earlier report by Hamilton et al.19 There are two main classes of monomeric building blocks that can be used to construct arylamide oligomers. One class is various aryl amino acids, which resemble natural R-amino acids, giving rise to backbones of one-way sequence. Another class consists of a combination of aryl diamines and diacids, from which symmetric oligomers are constructed. Both classes of oligomers can be readily prepared by successive amide couplings, as for the synthesis of natural peptides. Nevertheless, compared with those of the one-way sequences, 1H NMR spectra of the symmetric oligomers are significantly simplified, which is advantageous for the structural characterization of longer oligomers. The design concept for our self-organized frameworks is presented in Figure 1. The folded backbones are structurally common, but they have been designed to generate well-defined cavities with potential binding sites, such as MeO, F, or CdO units, in the central area. The zigzag and straight backbones may be conceptually regarded as an extension of the common “folded” foldamers. Benzene-derived monomers were chosen for all the frameworks, because their intramo-

and side chains can be readily performed at different positions, as indicated in Figure 1 by arrows.

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FIGURE 2. Energy-minimized conformations of hydrogen-bonded six-mer 1 (left) and seven-mer 2 (right). The appended groups are removed for simplification.

FIGURE 1. Self-organized arylamide frameworks (all with heptamer as an example) for the structural and functional diversity test: (a) one-way folded oligomers, consisting of the identical monomer segments, and symmetric (b) folded, (c) zigzag, and (d) straight oligomers, consisting of two different monomer segments. The balls represent aryl units, and the arrows show the positions where modifications may be performed.

Acyclic Molecular Receptors In the past decades, crown ethers and cyclophanes have been widely studied as synthetic receptors. Moore et al. have shown that folded m-phenylene ethynylene oligomers complex some neutral organic guests through hydrophobic interactions.23 We have developed several series of hydrogen-bonding-induced foldamers that possess cavities of defined size, as exemplified by compounds 1–4 (Chart 1).24–27 The compact conformations of these oligomers have been characterized by a combination of X-ray analyses of model compounds and various (2D) 1H NMR experiments. For 2, 3b, and 4, intramolecular cross-ring nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) connections were observed, as shown in 2, which provide convincing evidence for their helical conformations. The six methoxyl groups of 1 are located at the central region due to successive intramolecular hydrogen bonding.24 Fluorescent experiments showed that in chloroform 1 formed a 1:1 complex with ammonium cation 5 or 6. Their association constants (Ka’s) have been estimated to be 200 and 150 M-1, respectively. The binding has been attributed to intermolecular CdO · · · H-N hydrogen bonding and cation-π interactions. The stabilities of the complexes are moderate. Obviously, the presence of centrally orientated methyl groups is unfavorable for binding (Figure 2).

If the methoxyl groups in foldamer 1 are replaced by groups that are smaller but are still able to form intramolecular hydrogen bonds, the resulting structures may exhibit an enhanced binding ability for ammonium ions. Fluorine appeared to be the choice for this purpose. Somewhat surprisingly, early studies have suggested that fluorine in organic molecules has only a weak ability to serve as proton acceptor.28 In order to test this hypothesis, the solid-state structures of several model molecules have been obtained,25,29 which showed that both five- and six-membered F · · · H-N hydrogen bonds occur between their adjacent fluorines and amides. Encouraged by this observation, we first chose to use 5-alkylated 2-fluoro-3-amino-benzoic acids to construct one-way oligomers that are similar to 1. Unfortunately, the corresponding amide intermediates were obtained in very low yields (usually